@misc{Pigoń_Jakub_Praefationes, author={Pigoń, Jakub}, howpublished={online}, publisher={Zielona Góra: Oficyna Wydawnicza Uniwersytetu Zielonogórskiego}, abstract={Apart from the famous praefatio (maior), Livy's introduction to the Ab Urbe Condita as a whole, there are in the extant parts of this work four internal prologues (or praefationes minores), marking the beginnings of, respectively, books 2, 6, 21 and 31. In the present paper a short overview of prologues, and especially internal prologues, in ancient historiography is followed by a more detailed discussion of the four Livian passages.}, abstract={Particular attention has been paid to those motifs and ideas which connect Livy?s internal prologues with his main praefatio - notably to the notions of monumentum, memoria, and the imagery of looking and perceiving. A fragment from a later book, preserved by Pliny the Elder (HN praef. 16), almost certainly comes from another internal prologue; it is probable that there were more praefationes minores in Livy?s lost books (e.g. in 121).}, type={artykuł}, title={Praefationes minores: prologi wewnętrzne w Ab urbe condita Liwiusza = Praefationes minores: internal prologues in Livy's Ab urbe condita}, keywords={Titus Livius (59 p.n.e.- 17 n.e.), historiografia antyczna, prologi dzieł historycznych, wypowiedzi programowe historyków, ancient historiography, historical prologues, historical writers' programmatic statements}, }